THE MEASURE OF A SLICE OF TIME

by Kenneth Harper Finton

Time is a measurement. A measurement takes place only in the cognizant world.

Time is in the mind.

We who measure time create a timeline.

A line is simply a point that moves. Add time, and a moving point becomes a line. The same point is repeated over and over in the line’s appearance, the difference being the time and space. The same point is everywhere at one moment. To me, this is the secret of singularity.

Space-time exists in an eternal now, a pseudo moment that holds all that ever was and that which will ever be. Because time itself is relative to movement and speed, a photon begins and ends at the same moment, much as the Higgs boson does. We measured the duration of a moment differently because we measure it from our own viewpoints.

As humans, we have a past and a future because we live and operate in a time and space that travels at a particular speed, and we view ourselves as being in a specific region of space-time.

We can discern the artifacts and traces left by events that occurred in what we see as ‘then’, even though they take place in the eternal now. We are in different sections of space-time, experiencing some of the infinite number of experiences that can come into being in a world of endless possibilities.

We do not define space-time occurrences. What we define as individuals is infinitesimal. The part does not represent the whole. The whole defines the part.

While perception is observing and creating, what we see as being in the past – traces of particles and waves from the observed portion of time and space – can be seen in other sections of space and time that also exist in the eternity of now. Our perceptions create the world we live in, just as the perception of that world makes us.

Consciousness has no mass. It only needs awareness of another, and in that awareness, an entire universe is built. We exist in potentiality and come into existence in a space-time where we find ourselves materialized. Individually, we are but one small facet in the infinite number of potentialities that consciousness makes possible.

Because the now is an eternal moment, there is literally no such thing as a beginning and an ending. The eternal components of reality constantly change form. This change makes it appear that there are beginnings and endings, but what is changing is the conversion between matter and energy and between energy and matter. These are eternal processes. Even the information involved in these processes is preserved both physically and consciously, as in memory and relics, though both are sketchy representations of the past events.  

Our universe can be viewed as a perceptive awareness that behaves in a quantum fashion. Its task is to experience and create new experiences. It is everywhere at once. It exists for us at this exact moment. That one moment is eternal. It never ends. Nothing came before it, and nothing comes after it. It is eternal. This very moment that we experience now is written in time and space in that eternal moment. 

This process does not begin, but it has always been in the moment we call now. It was now, then, and it will be now in the future. That which changes is our viewpoints.

IS THERE VALUE TO PRAYER?

by Kenneth Harper Finton ©2014

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Those who believe that a personal God has a special will – a will greater than our own – think that God can hear their prayers and possibly be made to care enough about the situation enough to give them an answer.

Those who see no evidence at all that prayers are answered say, “No, the only people who care are those in your individual circle. God, if there is such a thing, has nothing to do with it.”

Then there are those in the middle who are not positive deep within that there is a divine being with a will for humanity. Just in case there is, they subscribe to a moral code written by some religion of combination of religions.

Prayer is interpreted differently by all the above.

Some see prayer as kneeling down beside the bed or before some vivid image. They fold and clasp their hands and give thanks or asking for blessings. Some make a habit of holding hands around the table as reciting some rote blessing that passes through us like an ineffective TV commercial.

But it this really prayer?

prayer definition

prayer

pre(ə)r/

noun

noun: prayer; plural noun: prayers

  1. a solemn request for help or expression of thanks addressed to God or an object of worship.”I’ll say a prayer for him”
  1. synonyms:
  1. invocationintercessiondevotionarchaicorison “the priest’s murmured prayers”

2.

  • a religious service, especially a regular one, at which people gather in order to pray together.”500 people were detained as they attended Friday prayers”
  • an earnest hope or wish.”it is our prayer that the current progress on human rights will be sustained”

 

Of all those definitions, I like the third the best: an earnest hope or wish. There is something about hope that foretells and defines the future. There is something about thanks that defines and appreciates the present.

Appreciating the present is the key ingredient of happiness.

The way be can do this is to take a small break in our routine and consciously be thankful for those good things that brought us to this moment and respectful to the bad things that also brought us to this moment.

Our present contains all the good things that have happened as well as the bad. Nature provides the bad things to keep us moving and progressing. What matters is the nature of the movement forward. Focusing on the good we want to accomplish will keep us on a chipper and more productive path.

These efforts need not public, as they are in essence a private thing. Prayer does not even have to be called prayer to be effective. Call it meditation … call is a cigarette break … call it a pause to reflect … call it reevaluation. It is all the same thing if the objective is to bring good will and happiness into the future.

 

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